receptor oligomerization
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eLife ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuya Kate Huang ◽  
Omar Almurad ◽  
Reizel J Pejana ◽  
Zachary A Morrison ◽  
Aditya Pandey ◽  
...  

Cholesterol is a major component of the cell membrane and commonly regulates membrane protein function. Here, we investigate how cholesterol modulates the conformational equilibria and signaling of the adenosine A2A receptor (A2AR) in reconstituted phospholipid nanodiscs. This model system conveniently excludes possible effects arising from cholesterol-induced phase separation or receptor oligomerization and focuses on the question of allostery. GTP hydrolysis assays show that cholesterol weakly enhances the basal signaling of A2AR while decreasing the agonist EC50. Fluorine nuclear magnetic resonance (19F NMR) spectroscopy shows that this enhancement arises from an increase in the receptor’s active state population and a G-protein-bound precoupled state. 19F NMR of fluorinated cholesterol analogs reveals transient interactions with A2AR, indicating a lack of high-affinity binding or direct allosteric modulation. The combined results suggest that the observed allosteric effects are largely indirect and originate from cholesterol-mediated changes in membrane properties, as shown by membrane fluidity measurements and high-pressure NMR.


eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khanh Dinh Quoc Nguyen ◽  
Michael Vigers ◽  
Eric Sefah ◽  
Susanna Seppälä ◽  
Jennifer Paige Hoover ◽  
...  

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) have long been shown to exist as oligomers with functional properties distinct from those of the monomeric counterparts, but the driving factors of oligomerization remain relatively unexplored. Herein, we focus on the human adenosine A2A receptor (A2AR), a model GPCR that forms oligomers both in vitro and in vivo. Combining experimental and computational approaches, we discover that the intrinsically disordered C-terminus of A2AR drives receptor homo-oligomerization. The formation of A2AR oligomers declines progressively with the shortening of the C-terminus. Multiple interaction types are responsible for A2AR oligomerization, including disulfide linkages, hydrogen bonds, electrostatic interactions, and hydrophobic interactions. These interactions are enhanced by depletion interactions, giving rise to a tunable network of bonds that allow A2AR oligomers to adopt multiple interfaces. This study uncovers the disordered C-terminus as a prominent driving factor for the oligomerization of a GPCR, offering important insight into the effect of C-terminus modification on receptor oligomerization of A2AR and other GPCRs reconstituted in vitro for biophysical studies.


Author(s):  
Kirstin Kucka ◽  
Harald Wajant

With the exception of a few signaling incompetent decoy receptors, the receptors of the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily (TNFRSF) are signaling competent and engage in signaling pathways resulting in inflammation, proliferation, differentiation, and cell migration and also in cell death induction. TNFRSF receptors (TNFRs) become activated by ligands of the TNF superfamily (TNFSF). TNFSF ligands (TNFLs) occur as trimeric type II transmembrane proteins but often also as soluble ligand trimers released from the membrane-bound form by proteolysis. The signaling competent TNFRs are efficiently activated by the membrane-bound TNFLs. The latter recruit three TNFR molecules, but there is growing evidence that this is not sufficient to trigger all aspects of TNFR signaling; rather, the formed trimeric TNFL–TNFR complexes have to cluster secondarily in the cell-to-cell contact zone for full TNFR activation. With respect to their response to soluble ligand trimers, the signaling competent TNFRs can be subdivided into two groups. TNFRs of one group, designated as category I TNFRs, are robustly activated by soluble ligand trimers. The receptors of a second group (category II TNFRs), however, failed to become properly activated by soluble ligand trimers despite high affinity binding. The limited responsiveness of category II TNFRs to soluble TNFLs can be overcome by physical linkage of two or more soluble ligand trimers or, alternatively, by anchoring the soluble ligand molecules to the cell surface or extracellular matrix. This suggests that category II TNFRs have a limited ability to promote clustering of trimeric TNFL–TNFR complexes outside the context of cell–cell contacts. In this review, we will focus on three aspects on the relevance of receptor oligomerization for TNFR signaling: (i) the structural factors which promote clustering of free and liganded TNFRs, (ii) the signaling pathway specificity of the receptor oligomerization requirement, and (iii) the consequences for the design and development of TNFR agonists.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judith Van Dingenen

Abstract Plants have two kinds of pathogen recognition receptors: extracellular receptor like kinases and proteins (RLKs and RLPs) and intracellular Nucleotide-Binding Leucine Rich Repeat (NLR) receptors. NLRs comprise three main domains: a central Nucleotide Binding domain (NB-ARC) that mediates receptor oligomerization upon activation, a C-terminal Leucine Rich Repeat (LRR) domain that defines receptor specificity and an N-terminal domain that mediates immunity. Based on the latter domain, the NLRs are subdivided into three monophyletic groups: RNLs (Resistance to Powdery Mildew8), CNLs (Coiled-Coils) and TNLs (Toll/Interleukin-1 Receptor homology). NLRs can be sensors or signal transducers. As sensors, NLRs can recognize pathogens by directly binding the effectors, by recognizing the effector’s action on other proteins, or by recognition of modifications to a non-canonical NLR domain. Continuous generation of NLR diversity is required to keep up with a range of rapidly evolving pathogens.


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